Fresh Hops At GABF

I have to admit: I'm looking forward to the booth hosted by the Oregon brewers at the Guilds Pavilion at this year's GABF -- especially if they're gonna pour some fresh-hops beer. I had a chance to attend a fresh-hops brewfest in Portland two years ago (thanks to an invite from Abram Goldman-Armstrong)(*1), where I discovered: oooohhhhhhh, boy. Fresh hops make a difference.

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*1: can't find a website for Abram, but if you google his name, you'll soon find where his interests lie. Hint: beer and organic.

Beer Festivals Coming At You

Yes, it's fall (or it feels like it here) and that means freshly sharpened pencils, the end of the peaches, the appearance of the apples and -- beer festivals right and left, including the Big Daddy, the Great American Beer Festival in Denver, now just a month-and-change away. (Tickets are still available.)

Charlie Papazian has a nice list of guidelines for enjoying festivals without going nuts.

To his list I would add this: 1. pack a supply of throat lozenges (festivals are noisy; you're gonna be shouting) 2. carry some earplugs (see above)

See you in Denver!

Leinenkugel News -- Good and Bad

Good news: article here about a national rollout of Leinenkugel beer.

I know people in craft brewing have mixed feelings about Leinie's, but to me, it's a midwestern brewery run by the same family for decades. And that family has worked hard to make good beer and treat people right. The Leinie-heads are legion. Me? I love Leinie Creamy Dark. That's the good news.

Here's the bad news. When I was writing the beer book, I had the pleasure of interviewing Jake Leinenkugel and his dad, Mr. Bill Leinenkugel. Lovely people. Lovely.

Bill Leinenkugel, who is now 87 and long retired, is one of those brewers who kept the faith during the dark days of the 1960s and 1970s. The beer business is never easy, but it was particularly difficult then for the nation's smallest brewers. Their numbers dwindled dramatically and those who survived did so only by dint of hard work and, well, faith. For the Leinenkugel family, it was all about keeping faith right there in Chippewa Falls. The brewery's survival mattered not just to them, but to their friends and neighbors who worked there.

The Leinenkugels have been criticized since then for selling to Miller in the late 1980s, but the family could see the writing on the wall: There was a good chance the company might not survive and they knew that the people who would be hurt the most were the people down the street and around the corner. So they sold. As a result, people in Chippewa Falls continue to enjoy the benefits of local beer and a good local employer.

Anyway, back to Mr. Leinenkugel: When I finished the initial draft of my manuscript, I sent a copy of the relevant pages to all my interviewees. (I wanted to make sure I hadn't screwed up basic facts or grossly misrepresented what people had told me.)

A few days later, Mr. Leinenkugel called me to thank me. He was obviously please as hell that anyone had taken the time to write a history (albeit short) of his family. He was kind, gracious, and .... thrilled.

I was in tears by the time I hung up

. Last week I learned that he has an inoperable brain tumor. He's dying. He knows he is. But in death as in life, he's keeping the faith. "God has been awfully good to me all of my life," he told an interviewer. "I have no qualms about dying." (*1)

So -- here's to Bill Leinenkugel. I can only hope to live my life with as much kindness and optimism as he has.

Thanks and a tip o' the mug to my pal Jim Arndorfer at the "Brew" Blog for info about the interview and about news about the Leinie rollout.

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*1. The interview is in Beer Business Daily, which is available only by subscription. Thanks to my dear friend Daniel Bradford, publisher of All About Beer magazine, for passing along the interview, and to BBD's owner, Harry Schuhmacher, for not minding that Daniel did so.

Why You Gotta Love Jay Brooks

As anyone who reads this blog (all five of you) knows, I am a fan of Jay Brooks. I can always count on him to come up with The Other Side of The Story.

And he has. Check out his investigation into the "Jurassic Beer" tale, which I blithely bought into with nary a backward glance. While you're at it, take a look at his (brief but cogent) report on Obama-and-Beer.

I'm telling you: The world needs Jay Brooks. Just had another thought: What a great thing he's on the side Reason And All Things Good. Because, ya know, given a slight twist of genetics or fate or whatever, he he could have been -- horrors -- a modern-day version of Wayne Wheeler (my least favorite political operative ever; and really, for Wheeler, it was all about power).

Yikes! Doesn't bear thinking about. I'm gonna go have a beer and toast to Jay, one of the Good Guys.